Each and every time I smell Private Label from afar, my immediate first impression is peppermints. To be precise: twisted, deranged, napalm-smoked, nuclear, apocalyptic, smoked peppermints in the middle of the snowiest pine forest somewhere in Siberia. It's an impression that I can't shake off, and it's one I generally like.
When I smell Private Label up close it has a consistent structural backbone of burnt rubber and bubbling tar from a hot, melting asphalt road. The note is there in Private Label's development from start to finish, varying only in its prominence, order of appearance, or forcefulness. It is always mentholated and camphorous, with a subtext of eucalyptus and peppermints, but also of sharp smoke and burnt rubber. Whenever I think that it has been tamed by patchouli, whenever I think that Private Label has been softened with labdanum amber and a big splash of aged cognac, I'll smell another part of my arm, and that rubbery, Mad Max, medicinal, burnt napalm smell will suddenly pop back up.
Private Label lists "leather" in its notes and, yes, the fragrance is often summarized as a vetiver-leather fragrance. To me, however, that description doesn't tell the whole story. On my skin, Private Label isn't a leather fragrance so much as it is birch tar one. There is a huge difference to my mind. Huge. Birch tar is a resinous extract that has been traditionally used to coat and treat rawhide and, as such, the camphorous, pine-y, phenolic, sometimes sulphurous ingredient is often used in perfumery to replicate the aroma of a certain type of black "leather." The perfume is a vetiver scent in many ways, but it is vetiver transformed into one living in Mad Max's world, a scent that the Road Warrior would wear with its uncompromising smoke, tar, asphalt, and rubber facets. If any of you love the toughness of Robert Piguet's vintage Bandit and the birch tar smoke of Andy Tauer's Lonestar Memories, but want both taken up a notch and infused with smoked vetiver, then Jovoy's Private Label is for you.
The core essence of Private Label doesn't change for hours on end. All that happens is a fluctuation in the prominence of certain notes, and a dropping of the fragrance's sillage. After 60-minutes, Private Label hovers about 3 inches above my skin; by the end of the fourth hour, it is a skin scent, though it remains extremely potent when sniffed up close. The prominence of the smoke elements varies, with the birch tar seeming softer and more manageable for a brief period around the second hour. Then, suddenly, at the start of the third hour, Private Label somehow seems even smokier! Though the mentholated notes are much less, the vetiver has overtaken the birch tar as the dominant element, and my word, is it dark! I've never encountered vetiver that is quite so smoked. This is not smooth vetiver like in Chanel's Sycomore, but some sort of mutant hybrid created in a peaty bonfire. The vetiver continues to dominate the rest of Private Label's development. All in all, it consistently lasted over 12 hours on my skin, with soft sillage but sharp notes.
I generally believe that all fragrances are unisex in nature, but I think Private Label definitely skews more masculine. However, I think that there is a narrow group of people who may very much enjoy Private Label: men and women who adore vetiver, but who also love birch tar, smoky fragrances, mentholated eucalyptus blends, and black leather notes. For me, it's as though Andy Tauer's Lonestar Memories and Naomi Goodsir's Bois d'Ascece had a swingers' orgy with bucketfuls of tarry cade, a very hippie Woodstock patchouli, Santa Claus' peppermint-eucalyptus muscle rub, Olivier Durbano's Black Tourmaline, and Serge Lutens' Fille en Aiguilles. Nine months later, the baby that resulted was Private Label.